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Kitsap Pride

Kitsap Pride 2019 • Stonewall 50
JOIN US AT OUR BOOTH!!
Saturday, July 20, 2019 Kitsap Pride is a festival celebrating the LGBTQ+ community in Kitsap County. This year our festival will feature two stages of entertainment including live music, a beer/cocktail garden, food vendors, 50 local exhibitors, Olympic College art project, and kids activities. Our location is beautiful Evergreen Park which has plenty of room for you to lay out a beach blanket and picnic on the grass.
11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Evergreen Park
Bremerton -
June 8: Bridge To Bridge Dinner & Auction
HUGE SUCCESS!!!
The 26th LD Democrats Annual Dine For Democrats at our Bridge To Bridge Dinner & Auction
HUGE SUCCESS!!
Date: Saturday, June 8th 2019
Speakers Derek Kilmer, House Congressional District 6, Hilary Franz, WA Commissioner of Public LandsTHANK YOU ALL FOR MAKING THIS THE BEST EVENING OF THE YEAR!
SEE YOU ALL NEXT YEAR!
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June 6: Panel on Social/Criminal Justice Reform
Program: Join us at our June General Meeting to hear from a panel of subject matter experts as they discuss the very important issue of Social/Criminal Justice Reform
Date: Thursday, June 6, 2019
Meeting Time: 6:30 – 8:30 NEW TIME!!
Social & Light Potluck Time: 6:00-6:30pm
Place: Givens Community Center – Kitsap Room
Address: 1026 Sidney Road Port Orchard 98366
General Meeting Day: Monthly on First ThursdaysPANELISTS:
Tarra Simmons, the Executive Director of Civil Survival and Seattle University Law graduate who won a long fight to simply take the bar exam after being incarcerated.
Drew Hansen, State Representative from the 23rd District.
Tracy Flood, a local civil rights lawyer and President of the Bremerton chapter of the NAACP.
Chad Enright, the Kitsap County Prosecutor, and Danielle Armbruster of the Department of Corrections.
Danielle Armbruster, Assistant Secretary of Corrections,
Adison Richards, moderatorPROGRAM:
Our nation incarcerates people at the highest rate of any nation in the world. Washington State’s prison population has gone from about 3,500 in 1980 to over 18,000 today. Of that population, Washington State incarcerates almost six people of color for every white person, one of the highest rates in the country. Federal, State, and county budgets are eaten up by the costs of incarceration. Recidivism, or the rate that people return to prison, remains stubbornly high. Why? Is our criminal justice system working to reduce crime? How does incarceration impact a person’s life? Are there things we do that increase the likelihood someone will go to jail? How do we balance public safety with personal responsibility, while not punishing everybody for life for the worst thing that they have done? Can the goals of public safety and changing our methods of accountability work in common? What can we do about it?

